Meat Is Good to Taboo: Dietary Proscriptions as a Product of the Interaction of Psychological Mechanisms and Social Processes

Journal of Cognition and Culture 3 (1):1-40 (2003)
  Copy   BIBTEX

Abstract

Comparing food taboos across 78 cultures, this paper demonstrates that meat, though a prized food, is also the principal target of proscriptions. Reviewing existing explanations of taboos, we find that both functionalist and symbolic approaches fail to account for meat's cross-cultural centrality and do not reflect experience-near aspects of food taboos, principal among which is disgust. Adopting an evolutionary approach to the mind, this paper presents an alternative to existing explanations of food taboos. Consistent with the attendant risk of pathogen transmission, meat has special salience as a stimulus for humans, as animal products are stronger elicitors of disgust and aversion than plant products. We identify three psychosocial processes, socially-mediated ingestive conditioning, egocentric empathy, and normative moralization, each of which likely plays a role in transforming individual disgust responses and conditioned food aversions into institutionalized food taboos.

Links

PhilArchive



    Upload a copy of this work     Papers currently archived: 91,202

External links

Setup an account with your affiliations in order to access resources via your University's proxy server

Through your library

Similar books and articles

Taboo or Not Taboo: Is That the Question?David H. Spain - 1988 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 16 (3):285-301.
Mechanisms in the analysis of social macro-phenomena.Renate Mayntz - 2004 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 34 (2):237-259.
Technology as Responsibility: Failure, Food Animals, and Lab-grown Meat.Wyatt Galusky - 2014 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 27 (6):931-948.
The concept of privacy from a symbolic interaction perspective.W. H. Foddy & W. R. Finighan - 1980 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 10 (1):1–18.
On the interaction of opposites in psychological processes.Ivana Marková - 1987 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 17 (3):279–299.
Social nudism and the body taboo.H. C. Warren - 1933 - Psychological Review 40 (2):160-183.
What’s so Special About Interaction in Social Cognition?Julius Schönherr - 2017 - Review of Philosophy and Psychology 8 (2):181-198.
The New Mechanical Philosophy.Stuart Glennan - 2017 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Analytics

Added to PP
2018-08-01

Downloads
9 (#1,187,161)

6 months
2 (#1,157,335)

Historical graph of downloads
How can I increase my downloads?